One of the things that turns me off most of 3e/Pathfinder is the power level. Stats are inflated way too much. If an 18 is the highest a normal person can achieve, magic should be able to exceed this limit, but not ridiculously so. I'd like to see the old cap of 25 in place, or something similar. There should be less emphasis on stats, and more on cool stuff. In 3E/Pathfinder, players reject the more flavorful items and opt for mechanical benefits? Robe of Useful Items? (My all time favorite magical item, btw) Sell it and buy a +2 headband of intellect. Folding Boat? Hocked for an extra plus on a weapon. This takes a lot of the coolness factor out of the game and makes it an exercise in mathematics only. I'd like to see the entire power scale trimmed down. Cap hit points at level 10 ala 1e, max pc attacks at 3. This will speed up combat immensely and make evocation spells useful again. Fireball has stayed the same damage for 30 years, yet hit points have tripled or quadrupled.

In a nutshell, I just want to see smaller numbers. Scale hit points, attacks, damage modifiers all back, and we'll have the same combat we have now, just fewer numbers to add.

"The worthy GM never purposely kills players' PCs, He presents opportunities for the rash and unthinking players to do that all on their own." -- Gary Gygax"Don't ask me what you need to hit. Just roll the die and I will let you know!" -- Dave Arneson

One of the things that turns me off most of 3e/Pathfinder is the power level. Stats are inflated way too much. If an 18 is the highest a normal person can achieve, magic should be able to exceed this limit, but not ridiculously so. I'd like to see the old cap of 25 in place, or something similar. There should be less emphasis on stats, and more on cool stuff. In 3E/Pathfinder, players reject the more flavorful items and opt for mechanical benefits? Robe of Useful Items? (My all time favorite magical item, btw) Sell it and buy a +2 headband of intellect. Folding Boat? Hocked for an extra plus on a weapon. This takes a lot of the coolness factor out of the game and makes it an exercise in mathematics only. I'd like to see the entire power scale trimmed down. Cap hit points at level 10 ala 1e, max pc attacks at 3. This will speed up combat immensely and make evocation spells useful again. Fireball has stayed the same damage for 30 years, yet hit points have tripled or quadrupled.

In a nutshell, I just want to see smaller numbers. Scale hit points, attacks, damage modifiers all back, and we'll have the same combat we have now, just fewer numbers to add.

Anyway, just my two cents.

While this doesn't speak directly to the question of "numbers," one of Joseph's directives for the DCC was to ensure that magic is magical again. You don't give up a robe of many things .... it might be the only one in existence!

Magic items are no longer buffs to be slotted. They are awesome antiquarian relics that don't admit to the laws of physics. They are magical.

While this doesn't speak directly to the question of "numbers," one of Joseph's directives for the DCC was to ensure that magic is magical again. You don't give up a robe of many things .... it might be the only one in existence!

Magic items are no longer buffs to be slotted. They are awesome antiquarian relics that don't admit to the laws of physics. They are magical.

Well, based on my kill ratios at playtest sessions, I think power inflation is the least of your worries. I would focus more on getting ANY of your characters to 2nd level. Hell, even getting to 1st level would be an accomplishment. Last year I ran 4 or 5 playtest games at GaryCon, and in the very first session I wiped out the ENTIRE party of 0-level characters. Not like 3 or 4 of them, but something like 18 PCs. "Playtest feedback for self: ramp down the death rate!" I consistently wipe out large portions of every party that runs through my playtest sessions. Part of this is my style as DM and preference for deathtrap dungeons, so we've tried running other adventures under the DCC rules (e.g., Tavis ran Castle Zagyg using DCC RPG rules recently) to see how much of it is me vs. the game system. It appears to be a mix. But you need not worry, this game has power deflation, if anything!

Well, based on my kill ratios at playtest sessions, I think power inflation is the least of your worries. I would focus more on getting ANY of your characters to 2nd level. Hell, even getting to 1st level would be an accomplishment.

I too like to run challenging games that result in large PC body counts. There's different ways to balance that out, and I look forward to seeing the place (or, should there be optional rules for HP kickers and the like, places) where DCC RPG ends up falling on the spectrum.

That reminds me of my buddy Trevor. Back in the 80s he had one of his fighters grab the necklace of missiles from the magic-user while all were attempting to get away from the "very bad thing" (I can't, for the life of me, recall what it was) and race right up to the monster hurling the necklace down point blank. He stopped the monster as both went out in a mushroom cloud!

While I am a fan of low-powered games, I also think that it should be realistically doable in AD&D for a magic-user to attain 18th level so as to be able to use those 9th-level spells. Sorry for using an AD&D example. I don't know enough about the DCC magic system to be able to use an example from it.

While I am a fan of low-powered games, I also think that it should be realistically doable in AD&D for a magic-user to attain 18th level so as to be able to use those 9th-level spells. Sorry for using an AD&D example. I don't know enough about the DCC magic system to be able to use an example from it.

DCC spellcasters can be incredibly powerful, pulling off miracles, but it can come at a terrible cost. There is only so long that mortals can dabble in the dark arts without being changed. Stare into the abyss and the abyss will look back.

one of Joseph's directives for the DCC was to ensure that magic is magical again. You don't give up a robe of many things .... it might be the only one in existence!

Magic items are no longer buffs to be slotted. They are awesome antiquarian relics that don't admit to the laws of physics. They are magical.

I like this concept, that you have the "robe of many things" rather than a "robe of many things." The unique factor helps lend the feeling of magical wonder, since it's not like you can just buy another at MagiMart.

I've run monsters like this sometimes as well, where each dragon has a name so that you're fighting a particular dragon rather than just "a dragon." Or, you fight "the minotaur" or "the medusa" ... much more in line with the literature.

"The worthy GM never purposely kills players' PCs, He presents opportunities for the rash and unthinking players to do that all on their own." -- Gary Gygax"Don't ask me what you need to hit. Just roll the die and I will let you know!" -- Dave Arneson

That's good to hear. It's not just how powerful pcs are, I still want them to be able to do cool stuff, I just want the cool things to have lower numbers attached to them. In my Pathfinder game, the ranger with kukris (d4 damage weapon) routinely hits for 25-30 points of damage per hit - and he NEEDS to do that kind of damage, the monsters hit points are so high. I'd rather cut that number at least in half and reduce hit points similarly. Net result, same battle, less modifiers to add, more time gaming, less time doing math. I'm really looking forward to the DCCRPG!

This game definitely sounds exciting. I am hoping that the power level is close to what C&C is. I feel that C&C fits nicely between Pathfinder & AD&D. After playing 3.x, AD&D feels a bit too light in terms of power, but Pathfinder & 4ed feels a bit too much. 1st level characters going up against BBEGs with 100 hps just feels too heavy. Based on what I am reading, this could fall close to what I am looking for.

In my Pathfinder game, the ranger with kukris (d4 damage weapon) routinely hits for 25-30 points of damage per hit - and he NEEDS to do that kind of damage, the monsters hit points are so high. I'd rather cut that number at least in half and reduce hit points similarly. Net result, same battle, less modifiers to add, more time gaming, less time doing math. I'm really looking forward to the DCCRPG!

And who needs high damage when you can ram your kurki in the minotaur's eyesocket and dig around until you find the brainstem?

One of the things that turns me off most of 3e/Pathfinder is the power level. Stats are inflated way too much. If an 18 is the highest a normal person can achieve, magic should be able to exceed this limit, but not ridiculously so. I'd like to see the old cap of 25 in place, or something similar. There should be less emphasis on stats, and more on cool stuff. In 3E/Pathfinder, players reject the more flavorful items and opt for mechanical benefits? Robe of Useful Items? (My all time favorite magical item, btw) Sell it and buy a +2 headband of intellect. Folding Boat? Hocked for an extra plus on a weapon. This takes a lot of the coolness factor out of the game and makes it an exercise in mathematics only. I'd like to see the entire power scale trimmed down. Cap hit points at level 10 ala 1e, max pc attacks at 3. This will speed up combat immensely and make evocation spells useful again. Fireball has stayed the same damage for 30 years, yet hit points have tripled or quadrupled.

In a nutshell, I just want to see smaller numbers. Scale hit points, attacks, damage modifiers all back, and we'll have the same combat we have now, just fewer numbers to add.

Anyway, just my two cents.

I agree that any magic item you find should be treasured and not parted with lightly. My old DM would probably say something like... Who do you think this shop keeper is Donald Trump. He doesn't have 50,000 GP sitting around waiting to buy all the magic items you want to dump. You might actually need a folding boat to save your skin in the future. Maybe you should keep it.

_________________"When creating your character,choose an ethical system that can justify nearly any fit of temper, greed, cowardice, or vindictiveness, for example, Chaotic Violent..."

DCC spellcasters can be incredibly powerful, pulling off miracles, but it can come at a terrible cost. There is only so long that mortals can dabble in the dark arts without being changed. Stare into the abyss and the abyss will look back.

//H

THIS is what magic should be! Am really looking forward to reading the rules.

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